Tuesday, 12 April 2022

Evolution of the musteloidea - Ventsislava Neykova


Evolution, raccoons and red pandas. This animation shows the evolutionary cycle and connection of these musteloidea animals. Although they are different from each other, research shows that they are very closely related and come from the same root family.

Read more about this work and other animation and sequential pieces under the Sequential Illustration tab above

Can't Stop Animal Nature - Lily Milan


Humans have trained dogs and specifically Labradors for centuries to follow our every command, however, their animals instincts are stronger at the end of the day. More in the Sequential Illustration page

Butterfly in the sheet music - Soo Choi



The Ulysses butterfly. I used sheet music imagery to show information about three ways butterflies communicate; physical action, sight and chemicals. The environment that the butterfly lives in and it's life cycle is also visualised and a repeat symbol shows the song is repeating.

Human Evolution; The Hominins - Chido

Homo Erectus, Homo Sapiens and Homo Neanderthalensis holding tools related to their era

Human evolution and the development of human history using three of the final stages of human evolution highlighting an item they would be holding, such as the Homo Erectus holding a wooden or quartz weapon, the Neanderthal holding a small axe, and the human holding a phone.

Saturday, 9 April 2022

Moth's Dinner - Chloe O'Shea



Lino print narrative about a mischievous clothes-eating moth.

The Ringed-Tailed Lemur - Run lemur Run - Wuraola Ogunmowo



This work studies the movement of lemurs, the title is'Run Lemur Run' because lemurs in general are endangered animals in Madagascar. Their population rate continues to decrease every day and their lives have resulted into running away from their homes and finding it harder and harder to survive as well as keep their young alive. This is because of activities like deforestation, poaching hunting and even climate change.

Snakes in Captivity - Jake Killgallon



Snakes in captivity exploring snake welfare and the problems with the snake trade with around 70% of snakes dying before even reaching the stores. This outcome combines both the notions of captivity and freedom within one image, which can be viewed through two different colour filters, the red drawing can be seen in the blue filter and the blue drawing in the red filter.